Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

BEARS MUST SOCK RUN BEFORE THEY HIT SACK

Foes don’t have to pass much because it’s so easy to rush football vs. Eberflus’ squad

- JASON LIESER jlieser@suntimes.com | @JasonLiese­r

A fierce pass rush is a defense’s most valuable weapon. And even after trading Khalil Mack, the Bears’ should still be pretty good.

They have the franchise’s season sack king in defensive end Robert Quinn on one side and Al-Quadin Muhammad — handpicked by coach Matt Eberflus from their days together with the Colts — opposite him. And they can sprinkle in promising upstart Trevis Gipson, who had seven sacks last season, and rangy rookie Dominique Robinson.

Yet the Bears have only seven sacks in their first four games and just one from Quinn.

They’re creating pressure on 29.7% of opponents’ passes, which ranks fourth, but rarely taking down the quarterbac­k. Pressures are good, but sacks change games. Sticking an opponent with third-and-16 creates prime time for takeaways.

“It’s really just staying motivated and not getting too discourage­d,” Gipson said. “It’s just continuing to work hard. It’s going to click for these guys.”

As always in football, everything is interdepen­dent.

If the Bears tightened up their run defense, for example, one byproduct would be more frequent and more advantageo­us passrushin­g opportunit­ies.

As the Bears have been bulldozed for an NFL-high 183.3 rushing yards per game, they’ve faced the fewest passes in the league. Why drop back against Quinn and throw into a secondary that has safeties Eddie Jackson and Jaquan Brisker scanning for intercepti­ons when running is relatively safe and easy?

“You have to create good situations for them to rush in, which is something we’ve got to do better — and that would tie into the run defense,” Eberflus said. “You get your run defense going and you’re better in firstdown efficiency, now you have the right to rush the passer. Now it’s second-and-longer, third-and-longer, and you get the situations that you like.”

Every defense craves obvious passing scenarios; every offense is desperate to avoid them.

The Bears’ opponents have had an average of 6.8 yards to go on third downs, which ranks 15th in the NFL. The Bears are allowing 5.5 yards per play on first down and have given up a first down on 26.6% of their first or second downs.

The Giants had five or fewer yards to go on seven of their 15 third downs last week, which eliminated that predictabi­lity that a pass rusher wants. They ran on five of those. The Bears’ run defense was so bad that the Giants were able to rush for 262 yards and six per carry despite playing without a healthy quarterbac­k.

When a problem like that persists this long, it’s not an aberration. So with this much video of Bears flailing at running backs, defensive coordinato­r Alan Williams anticipate­d that being the Vikings’ plan Sunday.

“They’re gonna come in and say, ‘Hey, they’re coming in our house, and we’re gonna run the ball down their throat, then play-action pass and get over their head,’ ’’ Williams said. “That’s what the stats say to do. So we’ll see if the stats lie or not.”

They usually don’t.

And while the Vikings’ offense hasn’t been remarkable, it can present a lot of problems.

Running back Dalvin Cook doesn’t have a 100-yard game yet and is averaging a career-low 4.4 yards per carry, but he’s surely looking at this as an opportunit­y to ignite his season. His success would bring the Bears’ other deficienci­es to light and minimize their opportunit­ies to rush Kirk Cousins.

Every quarterbac­k prefers to avoid pressure, but few see their performanc­e swing as wildly as Cousins.

Pro Football Focus rated him the No. 1 clean-pocket passer in the NFL last season but 17th when pressured.

Which version will the Bears see? That depends, of course, on whether they create pressure. And that depends on whether they can finally stop the run.

 ?? KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I/AP ?? Bears defensive end Robert Quinn has only one sack in four games after breaking the team record for sacks in a season in 2021 with 18½.
KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I/AP Bears defensive end Robert Quinn has only one sack in four games after breaking the team record for sacks in a season in 2021 with 18½.
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